For Fun only: Cost comparison of Then v Now
For Fun only: Cost comparison of Then v Now
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Milkyway

Original Poster:

12,511 posts

77 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Not to be taken too seriously... it’s just how it is interpreted.

Using this converter, so that comparisons will remain constant. see how things have changed over the years.

They refer to it as the ‘equivalent purchasing power’... so what you would have to spend now to obtain that item.

https://www.officialdata.org/uk/inflation/1990?amo...


EG:
1980: First wage packet.
Then: £28 Wk
Now: £142 Wk

1986: MG Maestro EFI
Then: 10K
Now: £34,600

1990: Calibra 8v
Then: 15K ( 18K inc finance / 24mths)
Now: 40K ( 48K)

1993: My house.
Then: 45K
Now: 108K ( biglaugh 250K+ really)
( Mortgage £250pm v £600pm)

1993: Peugeot 205 Junior (Diesel)
Then: 10K
Now: 24K


Edited by Milkyway on Thursday 8th December 14:40

Boom78

1,498 posts

72 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Some things from my 90s youth:

Nike air 180
1992 - £110
2022 equivalent - £269

Technics 1210
1993 - £399
2022 equivalent- £960 each!!

10 B&H wink
1994 - £1.10
2022 - £2.59

Edit to add this..

Amstrad CPC 464 with colour screen

1984 - £299
2022- £1135!!!!!






Edited by Boom78 on Tuesday 6th December 18:25

Randy Winkman

21,187 posts

213 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
I remember paying 3 new pence to get home from school on the bus in 1973. And my brother recounts a conversation he had with a pub landlord about how they were going to put the price of a pint up to 50p in 1980. He told the landlord he'd never pay 50p for a beer.

Edited by Randy Winkman on Tuesday 6th December 18:11

OldSkoolRS

7,085 posts

203 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Boom78 said:
Some things from my 90s youth:

Nike air 180
1992 - £110
2022 equivalent - £269

Technics 1210
1993 - £399
2022 equivalent- £960 each!!

10 B&H wink
1994 - £1.10
2022 - £2.59
I was talking to a smoker at the weekend and he said that 20 cigarettes are now about £10, so your theoretical 10 B&H (since apparently you can't buy 10 packs anymore) would be £5 now. I was trying to remember how much I paid back in the early 90s for a box of 100 but I guess that must have been about £10 going on your figures.

From my youth:

1982 A Squier Stratocaster guitar £250 (ish I can't remember exactly what I paid)
2020 A Squier Stratocaster guitar from £135 (though you can spend up to about £400 depending on exact model)



Milkyway

Original Poster:

12,511 posts

77 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Randy Winkman said:
I remember paying 3 new pence to get home from school on the bus in 1973.
Only about 43p today....
1972: Car & car conversion was 20p ( £3.12 )

Advert: Join the Royal Navy... £3000pa ( £46,800)

Edited by Milkyway on Tuesday 6th December 21:51

Seventy

5,500 posts

162 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
I’m sure I remember curly wurlys at 3p back in the early seventies.

Seem to be about a pound now.

Milkyway

Original Poster:

12,511 posts

77 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Seventy said:
I’m sure I remember curly wurlys at 3p back in the early seventies.

Seem to be about a pound now.
...& a lot smaller
(Or used to look massive in my tiny hands).

bloomen

9,606 posts

183 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Car and house prices are so warped by the differing availability of finance they can't really be compared to the past.

Milkyway

Original Poster:

12,511 posts

77 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Google: June 1979... petrol hit £1 a GALLON ( 22p / litre) yikes
( £5.98 v £1.32) scratchchin

Edited by Milkyway on Tuesday 6th December 19:06

OldSkoolRS

7,085 posts

203 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Milkyway said:
Google: June 1979... petrol hit £1 a GALLON ( 22p / litre) yikes
( £5.98 v £1.32) scratchchin

Edited by Milkyway on Tuesday 6th December 19:06
I wish it was that cheap now.

Curlywurly, Mars bars and Marathon (as they were then) seemed huge and I don't think that's all because I'm bigger these days.

Milkyway

Original Poster:

12,511 posts

77 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
OldSkoolRS said:
I wish it was that cheap now.

Curlywurly, Mars bars and Marathon (as they were then) seemed huge and I don't think that's all because I'm bigger these days.
Just finishing a (free) tub of Roses, & the wrappers are twice the size of the actual choccy... swindlers. irked


Edited by Milkyway on Tuesday 6th December 19:17

TwigtheWonderkid

48,191 posts

174 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
My first pocket calculator, 1974, had plus, minus, times and divide, £110
Now, around £2.50. Or splash out on a full scientific for about £7.50.

Milkyway

Original Poster:

12,511 posts

77 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
TwigtheWonderkid said:
My first pocket calculator, 1974, had plus, minus, times and divide, £110
Now, around £2.50. Or splash out on a full scientific for about £7.50.
1975: B/W VCR for a school... approx £600.(6K).
Just sounds plain daft.


Edited by Milkyway on Tuesday 6th December 19:28

Error_404_Username_not_found

3,982 posts

75 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Milkyway said:
Google: June 1979... petrol hit £1 a GALLON ( 22p / litre) yikes
( £5.98 v £1.32) scratchchin

Edited by Milkyway on Tuesday 6th December 19:06
I was working in Los Angeles when gasoline hit $1 a gallon. There were riots.
I can remember buying petrol for 1/11 a gallon including two shots of twostroke oil.

(One shilling and eleven pence - nine and a half pence in decimal). Roughly nthe same for a ten pack of No.6 cigs at the time but I was too young to buy either legally.

Type R Tom

4,261 posts

173 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
My starting grade in 2006 was £29k, which would be £49,500 now. That grade currently pays £43k

Am I doing this right?

grumpy52

5,984 posts

190 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
I seem to remember when I entered the workplace in the early 70s the price of a gallon of petrol,a pint of bear ,20 fags and a loaf of bread were all about 32p .
The biggest increases are due to the increase in government duty on things like fags and booze .
This certainly tilts the inflation indexes out of kilter .
I do remember me and a mate thrashing an S type Jag for the weekend and burning through £100 in fuel ! Felt like proper gangsters.

heisthegaffer

4,140 posts

222 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Occasionally I'll. Look through old argos catalogues from the 80s for nostalgic reasons. A couple of things that struck me were:-

- TVs etc were hideously expensive
- A toaster costedcabout £7.50 back then. Same as now.

Milkyway

Original Poster:

12,511 posts

77 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
Type R Tom said:
My starting grade in 2006 was £29k, which would be £49,500 now. That grade currently pays £43k

Am I doing this right?
If it’s anything like my old company... they loved moving those goalposts.

CypSIdders

1,234 posts

178 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
grumpy52 said:
a pint of bear
Tell me more, doesn't sound like fun, to be honest!

Milkyway

Original Poster:

12,511 posts

77 months

Tuesday 6th December 2022
quotequote all
heisthegaffer said:
Occasionally I'll. Look through old argos catalogues from the 80s for nostalgic reasons. A couple of things that struck me were:-

- TVs etc were hideously expensive
- A toaster costedcabout £7.50 back then. Same as now.

When the first ‘mobiles’ & car phones came out... they cost almost the same as a small car. yikes


Edited by Milkyway on Tuesday 6th December 19:43